Ali Mamlouk | |
---|---|
علي مملوك | |
Director of the National Security Bureau | |
Assumed office 25 July 2012 |
|
Regional Secretary Deputy |
Bashar al-Assad Abdel-Fatah Qudsiyeh |
Regional Secretary Deputy |
Bashar al-Assad Abdel-Fatah Qudsiyeh |
Preceded by | Hisham Ikhtiar |
Director of the General Security Directorate | |
In office June 2005 – July 2010 |
|
Preceded by | Hisham Ikhtiar |
Succeeded by | Zouheir Hamad |
Personal details | |
Born |
Damascus, Syria |
19 February 1946
Nationality | Syrian |
Religion | Sunni Islam |
Military service | |
Allegiance | Syria |
Service/branch | Syrian Armed Forces |
Rank | Major General |
Commands |
General Security Directorate (2005–2010) National Security Bureau (2012-present) |
Ali Mamlouk (Arabic: علي مملوك) (born 19 February 1946) is a special security adviser to Syrian president Bashar al-Assad and is one of his trusted men. Mamlouk is also head of the National Security Bureau of the Ba'ath Party.
Ali Mamluk was born in Damascus into an Circassian family on 19 February 1946. There is another report giving his birth year as 1945. His family is originally from İskenderun (Hatay in Turkey).
Mamlouk is said to be one of the founding officers of the Syrian Air Force Intelligence in the 1970s. He was deputy director there, when in June 2005 President Bashar Assad appointed him head of the General Security Directorate.
Mamlouk is said to be on good terms with all of Syria's intelligence agencies; the heads of the Air Force Intelligence Directorate and the Political Security Directorate were once his assistants. In July 2012 following the Damascus security HQ bombing, it was reported that Mamlouk would become the head of the National Security Bureau with the rank of minister overseeing the entire security apparatus, and that former military intelligence chief Abdel-Fatah Qudsiyeh would become his assistant.
Mamlouk is one of many officials sanctioned by the European Union for their alleged actions against protesters participating in the Syrian Civil War. His agency had 'repressed internal dissent, monitored individual citizens, and had been involved in the Syrian government's Siege of Daraa, where protesters were killed by Syrian security services". In addition, he was added to the European Union's sanction list on 9 May 2011 on the grounds that he "involved in violence against demonstrators" during the war.Swiss government also put him into sanction list in September 2011. On 23 April 2012, the US government imposed sanctions on him, saying he had been responsible for human rights abuses, including the use of violence against civilians.